Everyday more wounded Syrian rebels are brought in to Turkey and treated in border hospitals run by Syrian doctors and volunteers. NBC's Ayman Mohyeldin reports.
ANTAKYA, Turkey – It’s mid-afternoon, and in the basement of a non-descript residential building in a small town on the Turkish side of the border with Syria, volunteers are busy packing parcels of medicines and first-aid backpacks. The shipments today – as they have been every day – are destined for field hospitals on the battlefields inside Syria.
In this small makeshift warehouse, dimly lit air-conditioned rooms keep medicines cool. IV drips, resuscitator kits, bandages, gauzes, suture kits, pain medications and sterile operating kits are stacked on shelves from floor to ceiling. Every bag is stuffed. Not an inch is spared.
Workers here know every item taken inside Syria can save a life, or at least, help ease the pain of someone suffering.
The warehouse in Turkey is just one point in a vast global network aimed at helping the people of Syria caught in the crossfires of the ongoing conflict there. It is made up of doctors and nurses from America, working for an organization registered in France, buying medicine in Turkey, with funds from Arab countries and elsewhere in the world.
On the ground, the network is run by doctors, nurses and activists who help acquire the medicines locally and ferry them across the rugged border to the Syrian frontlines where people need them the most. Wealthy individuals, families and communities from around the region and the world have combined forces to help pay for the supplies.
While politicians and diplomats wrestle, argue, fight and disagree about what to do to end the violence in Syria, this is what ordinary men and women from around the world are doing to try and save lives.

Zohra Bensemra / Reuters
People and members of the Free Syrian Army carry an injured woman on a stretcher at an unofficial border crossing with Turkey in the northern Syrian province of Idlib on Monday.
Taking a toll on Turkey
If the frontlines of the war are deep in Syrian soil, the rear lines extend deep into neighboring Turkey.
For a country that has in recent times enjoyed an economic boom, coupled with new diplomatic clout in the region, Syria’s conflict is taking a toll on Turkey and some of Syria’s problems are spilling over into border towns and cities here.
Makeshift care centers dot the Turkish-Syrian border. In town after town, private houses or in some case whole buildings are being converted to patient centers where the wounded and injured from Syria are brought for care, help and sometimes shelter.
The Turkish government says they have taken in over 46,000 Syrian refugees since the start of the conflict. Many of them are housed in refugee camps along the border.
But many of the wounded and injured are brought to Turkish hospitals where they are treated and discharged. Once discharged, few have the proper resources to secure shelters or even the proper post-operative care. As a result, many are in desperate need of follow-up care.
Care houses run by Syrian doctors have sprung up to take in patients in desperate need of help. Many were amputees who lost limbs in battle, or were injured by the fighting – only to lose their limbs while being transported. They say their limbs could have been saved had proper medical care been readily available inside Syria. Instead, due to the long journey from Syrian cities – even though they are just dozens of miles across the Turkish border – many began to suffer infections that were incurable once they arrived on Turkish soil.
Over time, the houses have quickly filled up and the centers have become increasingly vital in providing critical care for some of the patients. Today, along this one stretch of the Turkey-Syria border, there are about half a dozen care centers housing between a dozen to 100 patients in each one, volunteer doctors say.
The average cost to run one of these centers is approximately $60,000 per month. Doctors are renting private residences in some cases and equipping them with basic supplies and equipment. They are not meant to operate as hospitals, but they are clearly serving life-saving functions at times.
'They need everything'
Many of those at the center we visited refused to give their names or even agree to be filmed for our video story. Patients regularly complained that although the care centers were providing important medical assistance, they were too ill-equipped, under-funded and poorly staffed to care for a steady stream of patients.
One patient from Aleppo with severe shrapnel wounds to his leg, agreed to speak with us but refused to give his name. He complained the facility was inadequately staffed.
"The Syrian National Council and the opposition groups are collecting millions of dollars from around the world for the revolution and they are just taking the money. Come look at the people here and see how we are being treated and you will see there is no money coming here,” he said.
Volunteers vehemently deny such charges. Instead, they say all of their funds are from private donations from individuals.
Mark Cameron, a Canadian volunteer medical worker who was visiting one of the centers for the first time with the aim of returning to the West to solicit more funds, was shocked at what he saw.
"They need everything. The situation is desperate. I've been in some troubled spots all over the world, most recently, Cambodia, and as serious as it is there, this need here is immediate. It's today, it's this second,” said Cameron. “They don’t have antibiotics. They did some surgeries here yesterday that blew my mind without pain control because they just don't have it. It simply doesn't exist and the surgeries have to occur."
Cameron stressed that the doctors’ mission is apolitical.
“This has nothing to do with religion, nothing to do with politics. This is a medical problem at the moment. We're medical professionals and were here to treat the medical problem.”
The volunteer doctors are mostly Syrians who are either living abroad or who escaped the fighting in their country. They are not allowed to practice medicine in Turkey because the care centers fall outside of the official Turkish health care system. But the facilities can help patients with post-operative care or serve as nursing homes for those with no places to go.
Supplies sneak across the border
Back at the warehouse, the medical supplies have been loaded on to a van. The van makes its way to the border under the watchful eye of the Turkish military, which sees the drop off in plain sight.
The military has turned a blind eye to much of the smuggling of medicines taking place along its border. It’s a sensitive issue for the Turkish government, which doesn’t want the border area to become lawless but is increasingly becoming porous for supplies, fighters and even weapons.
In broad daylight, we accompanied the volunteers as they coordinated with their counterparts on the Syrian side of the meeting point. Along a stretch of the border that is marked by layers of barbed wire, a few cars have already pulled up. Our van approaches, and within minutes the bags and boxes are dropped off, pushed across an opening in the razor wire and loaded in the back of smaller beaten down cars heading to different cities across the battlefield.
The entire drop-off lasted less than 10 minutes. Then it was back to the warehouse for the volunteers in Turkey and off to the frontlines for the activists in Syria. Both sides are in a race against time and acutely aware that with each successful mission like this one, there is another chance to save a life in a conflict that has already taken so many.



We need to stay out. We aren't the world's policeman, and as we saw in Iraq and Afghanistan, the locals dont want us anyway, we dont understand their culture.
We think of negotiation, and win-win.
Their first preference is they win and their neighbor loses. Their second preference, is they both lose.
A geenie said to an Arab, he will grant a wish to the Arab, but will give his neighbor twice what he gives the Arab. The Arab said to the geenie, please pluck out my eye ....
We should just stay out.
These countries always have plenty of money for guns and ammunition. Where are your brother comrades; Al Jazeera and other supporters?
I wish Assad would hurry up and put this rebellion down so things can get back to normal.
MUW YOU are too late buddy , both party are involved in arming these thugs , our honorable senator McCain and Graham and Lieberman are on the top of the list . Hillary is next along with all Israel supporters ( which that means all of your politicians in this country ) sorry buddy , we are screwed .
Long Live Assad, he is not the terrorist it is the NATO and U.S. Government they are the real killers, how many hundred thousand have died in Iraq, Afghanistan, Lybia and for what? I am talking about inocent civilians getting killed so that the U.S. and countries of NATO who by the way are pretty much broke at this point can have a say. Take care of your personal problems first, and stop funding terrorist organizations like the Muslim Brotherhood, by the way thats the group running the so called opposition for those of you who do not know it is also one of the oldest Terrorist groups in the world.
Kudos to armyan....
What's a well informed dude like you doing in this cybersapce sea of ignorance?
No Comments, but please watch these two videos and the decision depaends on the viewer!!
http://www.presstv.ir/detail/255098.html
http://theuglytruth.wordpress.com/2012/03/31/must-watch-iran-bashing-terrorism-and-who-chose-the-chosen-people-anyway/
What a bunch of cowards Shiites are? They talk big, act big and show their bravery before unarmed minorities like Jews, women and others. Then they add their dances when they stone them.
Shiites of Iraq should side with Kurds and should stop oil supplies to Turkey for supporting the Sunni Islamic extremists like al-Qaida, MB in Syria.
Shiites of Bahrain should overthrow their autocratic, corrupt and despotic Sunni ruler.
As they have been taking blows and killings by Sunnis, these Sunnis are able to act as they like to Shiites.
Shiites of Iran should side with Assad and see that all the Sunni rebels are eliminated.
What are the brave Hezbollah doing?
They should do suicide bombings in Mecca and Medina. Or else Shiites genocides just like the genocides of non-Muslims by the Sunni Islamic religious Nazis will continue.
The US should send in the USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort this would be a positive way to aid the Syrian people.
Also the US and EU perhaps even China and Russia could offer Aid this way as a start to peace. We as a people can try to save as many as we can without adding arms to the mix.
As usual,it's the innocent population that suffers...I can't even wrap my head around anyone wanting to go to war or fight with someone to hurt them.....I can understand self-defense,but this other stuff is beyond belief!!! May this stuff stop soon!!!!
This Aid is for sending Hospital ships only.
The US should send in the USNS Mercy and USNS Comfort this would be a positive way to aid the Syrian people.
Also the US and EU perhaps even China and Russia could offer Aid this way as a start to peace. We as a people can try to save as many as we can without adding arms to the mix.
The United Snakes (US/Israel/NATO) need to stop smuggling heavy weapons into Syria. There can be no pity for these wounded and maimed low lives imported from Libya by the 'evil twins' (US/Israel) into Syria to murder and maim, terrorize, torture, loot and rape in the name of trying to make the Middle East safe for Jewish terrorism and US Imperialsm.
Papa Assad needs to get some helicopter gunships over there and take out these US/Israel imported Libyan 'al-Qeada' low life 'rebel' assassins of innocent Syrians who then blame the Syrian government for their war crimes. The United Snakes (US/Israel/NATO) need a little teeth (((rattling))) care themselves. Go get 'em Assad!!!!
People with no common sense should run for political office since politicians have none anyway. If I were president, I would put my foot down and stop being apathetic to fighting countries and just tell them to stop or no aid from us. We shouldn't be giving aid to any country anyway, let them handle their own problems. Why should my tax dollars be going to them instead of my own fellow countrymen who really need it until they get back on their feet? The only reason many countries citizens are lacking food and help is because the idiotic big shots keep everything for themselves, look how fat they are and where they live.
It's only a matter of time until we hear about innocent syrian refugees being killed by the Israeli Military in the Golan Heights...Every other border country is accepting refugees except Israel ..Defense Minister Ehud Barak is already preparing for the Slaughter..Instead of provoking violence and forceful annexation of territory that isn't theirs they should use their strength for Good
The people of Israel know what it is to be vulnerable; to be refugees. Their country now has an opportunity to show just how deep that understanding really is. Everyone deserves a safe haven in their time of need, even- or in this case especially — when it comes from an unlikely source.
The reason that things are so desparate for the Syrian rebels, is because, despite what they think, Allah is not on their side. Sell the Muslim Brotherhood in Syria, all the ammo they can afford to buy, give them nothing for free. Syrians killing Syrians has to be a good thing.